Evacuation Day remembered at Dorchester Heights ceremony

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As the Lexington Minutemen fired a volley, Dave Loda, as George Washington, signaled the salute at the Dorchester Heights National Monument.

By Catalina Gaitan
Globe correspondent
March 17, 2014

Clad in Colonial dress, a band of Minutemen fired their muskets into the air Monday morning at a ceremony in Dorchester Heights in honor of Evacuation Day, which commemorates a pivotal moment in the Revolutionary War.

“We consider that battle as the birth of this country,” said Thomas McGrath, president of the South Boston Citizens Association, which helped to organize the event at the neighborhood park.

“New community members are moving in to South Boston, but they’re respecting the history of the community and keeping the tradition going.”

About 150 people, including state Representatives Gloria Fox and Nick Collins, started the day at 9 a.m. with an Evacuation Day Mass at St. Augustine’s Chapel.

A march to Dorchester Heights followed, where rangers from the National Park Service were on hand to answer questions about George Washington’s arrival in 1775 to lead the Colonial troops and the construction of a fortress in Dorchester Heights.

Several local high school and middle school students received awards for essays that explained the role of Washington and patriot Henry Knox in Evacuation Day.

“It’s important kids learn about this, because when you think of St. Patrick’s Day and all the hullaballoo that surrounds the parade, today is the day to recognize the historical significance of what Evacuation Day is all about,” Flaherty said.

Before heading to a luncheon at the historic Shirley-Eustis house in Roxbury, the Allied War Veterans Council laid a wreath to honor men and women of South Boston who served in the armed forces. The Lexington Minutemen gave a final salute to the fort as they exited the historic battleground.

Evacuation Day, which was established in 1941, falls on the same day as St. Patrick’s Day. In what may have been a telltale nod to the city’s Irish-American population, Governor Leverett Saltonstall
signed the bill in green ink.